Twenty seven patients with cervical cancer were treated with PVP therapy including cisplatin 50mg/m2, vinblastine 4mg/m2 and peplomycin 15mg/body during the period from 1984 to 1989. Fourteen patients had a primary lesion. Five of 14 patients were treated with PVP as the primary therapy because of pathological findings which suggested no radiotherapy effect. Nine patients had a radio-resistant lesion and were treated following PVP. Twelve of 14 cases responded and median survival time was 32.5 months (2-101 months). Thirteen patients were treated with PVP because of recurrent cervical cancer. Five of those which recurred after radiotherapy and other 8 cases had been treated with radical hysterectomy and radiotherapy. Two of 5 cases with previous radiotherapy responded and one of 2 patient is still alive with no evidence of disease, but the patients treated with radical hysterectomy and pelvic irradiation showed no sign of a PVP effect and all of them died within 1 year. Primary cases responded even after radiation and some are still alive after more than 5 years. But PVP had no effect on the in patients which there was recurrence. It is necessary to determine which regimen is better, how to select the dose of cisplatin and how to combine the chemotherapy and other therapy. Patients who responded survived for a long time and PVP is an effective therapy. To obtain a better prognosis for advanced cervical cancer, we need a prospective randomized study of radio-chemotherapy or chemo-radiotherapy.